Problems With Rapid Opiate Detox

Painless Rapid Opiate Detox

A relatively new and still very controversial form of opiate
detox, rapid opiate detox, promises complete withdrawal from all opiates within
a day, and since the process is done under anesthesia, patients experience no
pain.

Why go through painful withdrawal?

And when considering the real and prolonged pains of a
conventional detox off of opiate type drugs (heroin, oxy, vicodin…) the
promises made by rapid detox advocates sound quite inviting, and if detox pains
can be avoided, why should anyone endure days of agony as in a conventional and
painful withdrawal?

Additionally the relapse rates as reported are quite
impressive, and although the process is expensive ($15 000 - $20 000) the
overall cost is not greater than that for many private drug rehabs.

Unfortunately, what sounds too good to be true often is, and
critics of rapid opiate detox point to several serious problems with the safety
and efficacy of the treatment.

How does rapid opiate detox work?

Patients undergoing rapid opiate detox are placed under
anesthesia for anywhere from 4 to 48 hours, and during this time they are
pumped full of medications that accelerate the detoxification process,
primarily the drug nalexone.

Were patients conscious for this pharmaceutically
accelerated period of detox the agony would be unbearable, but since they
remain sedated they awake at the end of the procedure opiate free, spared the
worst of the pains of detox, and with no memory of any of it.

Rapid opiate detox practitioners report astonishing success
rates, and although they will often recommend pharmaceutical aftercare with
naltrexone (a drug used to prevent opiate and alcohol relapse) no other therapy
or treatments are included in the price. Addicts are reported cured of their
addictions in a weekend, and can resume life on Monday free from an addiction
to drugs.

Because the fear of the intense pains of detox keeps many
addicts using and abusing for years, advocates of the program argue that in
addition to its effectiveness, it also increases compliance rates for
treatment, and has great potential to better our societal problem with opiate
addiction (currently there are an estimated 1 million heroin addicts, and 6 or
more million pain pill addicts).

What are the problems with rapid opiate detox?

Although we all wish it were so, there are no magic bullet
cures for addiction and none on the horizon either, and most addiction
professionals dismiss rapid opiate detox as unsafe, costly and ineffective; and
recommend conventional forms of detox and treatment as far preferable
alternatives.

Health risks

A number of people have died within days of the procedure,
and doctors have questioned the overall safety of a procedure that greatly
taxes the body as it intensified the symptoms of withdrawal. Although you do
not consciously feel the pains of withdrawal, your body does endure them, and
endures a greatly accelerated version of an already difficult period.

Both the medications used and the symptoms of the detox are
very hard on the body, and since many opiate addicts enter into detox in
somewhat ill health, the risks of the procedure are great.

Effectiveness

Additionally, although rapid opiate detox clinics report
astonishing success and abstinence rates (as high as 100%) there has been little
independent confirmation of these reports, and those few studies that have
looked at relapse rates closely have found long term abstinence rates very low.

Detox alone is not therapy, and although they may advertise
a cure, the disease of addiction cannot be cured and only managed. Detox is but
the first step to sobriety, and detox without treatment has never proven very
effective.

There are reasons why the initial abuse and addiction
occurred, and unless recovering addicts can understand and come to terms with
those things in life which created the first addiction, a second is sure to
soon follow. Additionally, although with the end of detox so to do the worst of
the pains end, temptation and cravings do not, and although you no longer feel
the pains of withdrawal, a hunger for drugs remains.

Without offering any therapy or other forms of treatment,
the likelihood of ultimate success after a rapid opiate detox is very low.

Costs

The costs of the procedure preclude access to those unable
to foot the bill, and no insurance carrier will offset any of the costs of this
still controversial form of treatment. While those in a position to pay may be
attracted to the minimal disruption of the procedure, since without aftercare
therapy and treatment the risks to relapse are so high, it is very likely
wasted money.

Believe those not in a position to profit

The procedure remains very controversial, and advocates for
and against rapid opiate detox are at loggerheads over the technique. Very
tellingly though, those arguing for the procedure are almost all in a position
to profit from its usage, and those against are independent scientists with no
financial stake one way or the other.

Addiction to any form of opiates demands that a price be
paid. Although anyone would wish to avoid days of agony; the risks to heath,
the expense of the procedure, and the questionable efficacy of detox without
therapy should all deter anyone from a serious consideration of rapid opiate
detox.

Thinking about a home opioid detox? Talk to your doctor before you get started to find out more about a bunch of over the counter and prescription medications that can help to reduce the discomforts of the withdrawal period.